Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Mexico: Transvesties to get new ID Card.

In the event that you missed this one.
Step by step we move forward, albeit sometimes we go a step forward and two backwards, temporarily of course - In any event, Hip, Hip... Hurray! (backward(?)) Mexico - he, he, he.
I may be nit-picking, but I understand that a transvestite (Transvesti in parts of Latinamerica) roughly translates to crossdresser and this group also includes heterosexuals men or women who crossdress at least part time, Transgender as me, but they do not identify themselves with the opposite gender.
I remember that during the time I worked with TransActionSF, we were having discussions about Transgender Terms and Definitions because we felt then, as I feel now, that we continue to be defined by others and sometimes the description does not really defines us clearly; we should define ourselves.
Just a nit-picking thought?
Aurora
Source: "Manuel Ortiz" manuel@alianzanews.com

Mexico Transvestites To Get New IDs

Mexico City ordinance allows new gender to be official


MEXICO CITY -- Transsexuals in Mexico City can get new - and altered - identity documents starting Monday if they provide a birth certificate and a medical certificate to local authorities thanks to a new municipal ordinance.

Those eligible for the benefit are those people who have a report issued by two specialists certifying that they have undergone - or are in the process of undergoing - a sex-change procedure, whether or not it involves surgery.

One of the promoters of the initiative is municipal assemblyman Jorge Carlos Diaz Cuervo, of the Alternative Social Democrat party, who told Efe that the aim of the reform is to put a halt to discrimination.

The 42 family courts in Mexico City will receive the requests to modify the name and sex on the birth certificates of interested transsexuals, who must prove that they are adult Mexican citizens who have subjected themselves to "a process of (sexual) reclassification."

The leftist-led Mexico City assembly in recent years has approved some avant-garde and controversial reforms, including the law eliminating the penalties on having an abortion during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy and the cohabitation law that permits unions between homosexuals.

The assembly also approved the Advance Intent Law by which terminally ill or injured capital residents can elect to reject medical procedures that might prolong their lives - and presumably their agony - and instruct authorities to allow them to die naturally without any medical intervention. EFE


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